Black Country Bugle

A beginner’s guide to topiary

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If you’ve ever wandered around country estates admiring giant animals and other weird and wonderful topiary shapes, you may think it’s way out of reach in your own outdoor space.

Yet creating simple topiary in regular gardens can offer yearround interest and structure, even in the smallest space.

Chris Crowder, head gardener at Levens Hall and Gardens, the world’s oldest topiary garden, in Kendal, Cumbria, offers the following tips for beginners...

What evergreens should you use?

“The best two have been yew and box because they are evergreens, so they always look good and naturally they are trees and shrubs that used to grow in the shade under other trees,” Chris advises. “Yews are used to a bit of shade, so you can make a form and the lower parts stay fully clothed with leaves.”

Yew and box also have little leaves, so when you trim them it’s not as obvious as if you trim a larger-leaved shrub like laurel.

“Plant them small and grow them into a shape, working your way upwards and outwards.

“Topiary is like a journey. You’re never finished, they’re always developing. You clip it back and it might be bigger one year than another. Let the roots establish for a year after planting and then go at it with secateurs or clippers.”

What tools do you need?

“You can get little battery trimmers, but a pair of hand shears are just the job for smaller topiary,” says Chris.

Which is the best shape for beginners?

Cones, cubes or rounded shapes are best.

Try cloud pruning

“This is rounding off a shrub to make billowing, cloud-like shapes. It’s a relatively recent popular way

of shaping,” explains Chris. “Imagine a load of box balls, blobbed together like bubbles, and shape around the outline to make a billowing cloud-like shape which can make a good garden feature.

“There’s no set shape, you are not trying to get a particular measure across or angle, so nobody can say it looks a bit out.”

Have a go with a formal cone

“Often a cone is a good place to start, with a pointed top,” says Chris.

“They never look good when you first start because when you trim the whole idea is that next year, wherever you’ve cut them back to, half a dozen shoots grow out. Each season whatever shape you make improves.

“At first they may look rough but if you persist, all the gaps get filled in by the growth from below and you end up with the smooth surface that topiary is supposed to have.”

When making a yew cone, you will need multiple uprights (stems) and one central leader, and cut out all the competitio­n.

“I’d usually have a straight stick or a cane to put against it just to remind me of what the straight edge is, then walk around it a few times, take a bit off, stand back and have a look and take a bit more off. Bring it up to a point,” Chris advises.

What if you go wrong?

“It doesn’t matter, because in a few months it will fill out and grow on.”

Be patient

“You only need to clip away once or twice a year, so they are not very high maintenanc­e, but you are hand-crafting elements, creating something over a period of years,” Chris says.

For more on Levens Hall and Gardens, visit levenshall.co.uk

By HANNAH STEVENSON

 ?? ?? In good shape: Assorted topiary in a garden
In good shape: Assorted topiary in a garden
 ?? ?? Topiary at Levens Hall Gardens
Topiary at Levens Hall Gardens
 ?? ?? Cloud-pruned Japanese holly
Cloud-pruned Japanese holly

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